You could try one of the record cleaning machines from Origin, Moth, VPI or Clearaudio. They 'deep clean' the grooves of the disc and greatly reduce surface noise.
However, they aren't cheap; you're looking at over £400 for any of those mentioned above. Check out the ones on eBay for more info.
2007-04-27 18:29:18
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answer #1
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answered by Nightworks 7
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Yeah , as above, the best solution is to deep clean and remove the contamination, howerver there is comuter software available to smooth out the clicks, as with all things it sometimes cannot discriminate between noise and dynamics in the music. Theres still a big following of vinyl and the skys the limit price wise on decks. For a few thousand you can get a record player that reads the grooves by laser.
2007-04-27 21:13:47
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answer #2
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answered by John S 4
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Yes there is such a thing. In the 80's I had an SAE 5000 it was a box you connected and it removed record noise. Check out this comment, some guy said he found one on ebay for $20. I'd give you mine but I sold it years ago.
2007-04-27 11:36:21
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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you ought to use loose application like Audacity. purely keep in mind that removing noise impacts the rather recording (the way it sounds). the ultimate thank you to sidestep all of it's via getting your mic nearer to the speaker or PA speaker. The farther away you're, the greater noise you will checklist. the ultimate way is to hook straight away contained in the PA line output. this is how we do it in television. desire this facilitates, and sturdy success!
2016-10-04 00:24:47
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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get up todate, vinyl crackles to much get cd's there more modern
2007-04-27 11:09:43
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answer #5
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answered by Lisa T 6
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turn the volume right down
2007-04-27 11:09:10
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answer #6
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answered by Lyndon001 3
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You can't.
2007-04-27 11:17:10
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answer #7
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answered by Zipps86 2
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